Kim Seng Co. v. Great American Ins. Co. of New York,___ Cal. Rptr. 3d ___, 2009 WL 3791874 (Cal. Ct. App. (2d Dist.) 2009)

The court found, affirming the trial court, that the first publication exclusion applied to bar potential coverage. The court specifically rejected arguments that the exclusion does not apply to a trademark infringement but is rather limited to libel, slander, and invasion of privacy claims. It also rejected the notion that the word “material” used in the policies’ definition of the “advertising injury” rendered the prior publication inapplicable to the trademark infringement claims in the case.

Finally, it concluded that the fact that the trademark words in question were used in different word formulas and in connection with a new logo during the term of the policy did not make a difference.

The court found determinative the recent decision of United National Ins. Co. v. Spectrum Worldwide, Inc., 555 F.3d 772 (9th Cir. 2009), which interpreted an identical exclusion finding it applicable to the full range of offenses. Id. at 778.

Spectrum follows a problematic analysis of the four offense subparts. It fails to recognize that 4 minus 2 equals 2, not 4. Only subparts (a) and (b) are implicated by the use of the “advertising injury” definition. “Advertising injury” is defined by its four constituent elements that comprise the pertinent offenses. All must be considered when the phrase “advertising injury” is used as a predicate to those items which are excluded. Thus, four items within “advertising injury” demark the possible scope of the covered claims; and only two “arising out of oral or written publication of material” are implicated since only two of the four offenses have such an element in play. Exclusions are to be narrowly interpreted and this is not the path followed by the Ninth Circuit in Spectrum.

The first publication exclusion was not limited to a trade dress claim and moreover there is nothing to suggest “material” as used in the policy requires a tangible option such as packaging, citing Aloha Pacific, Inc. v. California Ins. Guarantee Assn., 79 Cal. App. 4th 297, 319-20 (2000).

It would make no sense for the exclusion to apply only to the specific packaging or label and not to the infringing trademark that is the subject of the underlying action.

Id. at *5.

In essence the court found that the same mark was used before, after and during, and thus the exceptions to applicability of the IP exclusion had no reign here.

The pertinent marks “Old Man Que Huong Brand” and “Que Huong” mark, in the insured’s view, differed from certain marks initiated during the policy period. To wit,

“Bun Tuoi Hieu Que Huong Brand,” “Bun Que Huong Dac Biet,” and the Water Buffalo design mark consisting of the words “Que Huong” and any other mark confusingly similar to Great River's marks) . . . .

Id. at *6.

A simple republication of the same improper words “Que Huong” prior to the policy period was the basis for asserted trademark liability.

The underlying action focused on the use of a trade mark, “Que Huong.” Great River did not allege an infringement based on Kim Seng's use of any other words or images. Great River alleged in the underlying action infringement by any Kim Seng trademark using the words “Que Huong” as part of a trademark that was confusingly similar to Great River's Que Huong mark. Great River has no claim as to any words other than “Que Huong.” Even with the addition of descriptive words and logos, the use of the term “Que Huong” still suggests that the Kim Seng product is from the same source as products bearing the original “Que Huong” mark – the Great River product.

Id. at *7.

Distinguishing but affirming the viability of Taco Bell Corp. v. Continental Cas. Co., 388 F.3d 1069, 1072-73 (7th Cir. 2004), the court found a distinct act of potential liability for common law misappropriation involving the specific episode in the barking feisty Chihuahua character used by Taco Bell to promote its food where they had it popping out of a cardboard cut-out.

The case fell within Ringler Assocs., Inc. v. Maryland Cas. Co., 80 Cal. App. 4th 1165 (2000), which found that immaterial variation from the original work to that republished was not sufficient to avoid the applicable exclusion.

“[T]he first-publication exclusion language at issue is intended to and in fact bars coverage of an insured's continuous or repeated publication of substantially the same offending material previously published at a point of time before a policy incepts, while not barring coverage of offensive publications made during the policy period which differ in substance from those published before commencement of coverage.” (Id. at p. 1183, 96 Cal.Rptr.2d 136.)

Id. at *7, quoting Ringler.

Harleysville Ins. Co. of N.J. v. M & R Mechanical Contractors, Inc., No. A-4812-07T2, 2009 WL 1675712 (N.J. Super. Ct. App. Div. Jan. 26, 2009)

Following remand for discovery respecting publications that might have precluded coverage under the first publication exclusion, the malicious prosecution coverage otherwise implicated by the fact assertions triggered a defense.

In New Jersey malicious prosecution is described as malicious use of process in a civil context. Only the third action filed in this series of underlying cases is alleged to

have been maliciously prosecuted, described as the Design III arbitration.

Under New Jersey law, the elements of an action for malicious use of process are: (1) that defendant's complaint was “filed maliciously and without probable cause,” (2) that the complaint was “terminated favorably” to the plaintiff claiming malicious use of process; and (3) that the plaintiff “suffered a special grievance.” Grodjesk v. Faghani, 104 N.J. 89, 102 (1986) (citing Penwag Property Co. v. Landau, 76 N.J. 595, 598 (1978)). In essence, the wrongful conduct of malicious use of process involves commencing a legal action without justification.

Id. at *5 (footnote omitted).

In Harleysville, the insurer conceded that the asserted action for bringing the Design III arbitration constituted either malicious prosecution or abuse of process under its pertinent policy language covering personal injury. Harleysville argued, rather, that the Design III action which occurred in January 2005 after the coverage term began in November 2004, arose out of earlier publications by M&R that predated the policy. The court applied the first publication exclusion to the malicious prosecution offense because

[A]lthough “publication” is not commonly thought to be a defined element of a malicious prosecution claim, the filing of the offensive action, whether it be civil or criminal, can reasonably be considered a form of “communication” injurious to another party. The filing of a written demand for arbitration is, in this sense, a form of “publication.”

Id. at *6.

Nevertheless, that it was unavailing because “the sole offensive and injurious conduct that gives rise to DPS's federal action is M & R's filing of the third arbitration, Design III, against DPS in January 2005.” Id. at *6.

To be sure, the alleged offensiveness of that third arbitration demand relates to the fact that M & R already had its rights under the contract with DPS determined in the two prior arbitrations. But the offensive behavior, and the source of the corresponding injury to DPS, is the third filing, not the ones that preceded it. . . .

This is not a situation reasonably contemplated by the “first publication” exclusion, which is aimed at insulating an insurer from an exposure for harm that was already inflicted by an earlier publication predating the period of coverage. See, e.g., Applied Bolting Tech. Prod., Inc. v. USF & G, 942 F.Supp. 1029, 1037 (E.D.Pa.1996) (barring coverage for injuries that arise out of “oral or written publication” of any material, whose publication occurred prior to the beginning of the policy period).

Id. at *6-7.